Pubdate: Fri, 11 Aug 2006 Source: Interlake Spectator, The (CN MB) Copyright: 2006 The Interlake Spectator Contact: http://www.interlakespectator.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2164 Author: Jim Mosher MAMMOTH POLICE RAIDS NET FIREARMS, AMMUNITION, DRUGS; THREE ARRESTED Joint Operation in Armstrong, Gimli Police seized weapons, ammunition and drugs during a pair of simultaneous, high-risk raids Tuesday morning. One hundred officers from the RCMP and Winnipeg Police Services descended on rural properties in Armstrong and Gimli to execute search warrants at 11 a.m. Aug. 8. Bomb disposal, emergency response, canine, identification and criminal investigations units from each of the police services mounted the largest coordinated police raid in the history of the Interlake. Crisis negotiators from each of the services were also ready to go into the fray, but were not required. The targets of the raids included a property seven miles west of Hwy. 8, just north of PR 229 in the RM of Armstrong; and a property five miles west of Hwy. 8, also just north of PR 229, this one in the RM of Gimli. Illegal firearms, ammunition and a quantity of drugs were seized at the Gimli site. There were no seizures at the Armstrong site late Tuesday afternoon, but a full search had yet to be conducted. A 41-year-old male who lived at the Armstrong property was arrested without incident in a parking lot in Komarno, while a man, 53, and a 38-year-old female were arrested at the Gimli site. Each of the three was arrested without incident, police say. There were other people at the Gimli site, but police declined to confirm the number or ages of these people, who were released and not believed to be subjects of the investigation. Two helmeted police officers wearing black, bullet-proof jackets, carrying sidearms and high-powered semi-automatic weapons, blocked the highway entrance to the Gimli site, where undercover police officers, city Emergency Response Unit officers and members of the Winnipeg Police Service Identification Unit and Canine Unit were still at the scene. The unusual display of firepower and the well-strategized raids came as the culmination of an eight-month investigation. Police were circumspect about the links between the two properties, but said those arrested may be involved in organized crime. RCMP spokesman Staff Sgt. Steve Saunders said police brought everything to bear in the raids to ensure the safety of all. "Both sites were treated with the same caution," Saunders said. "Any time weapons are involved and explosives are involved ... with that level of risk it was important to make the sites safe for the subsequent searches." Winnipeg Police Service public information officer Const. Jacqueline Chaput also cited the need to err on the side of safety. "We did deploy a big amount of resources, but we thought safety was of the utmost importance," Chaput said. Police escorted a convoy of media vehicles to each of the sites just after 5 p.m. Staff Sgt. Saunders and Const. Chaput offered few details when pressed by reporters during a media conference at the edge of the driveway of the Gimli property. Search teams and investigators had yet to arrive, though the sites were being secured by containment teams. Police said it would probably take two days to examine each of the sites and catalogue whatever items may be seized as part of the investigation. "This is an ongoing investigation between the Winnipeg Police Service and the RCMP. The intelligence has been shared all along, back and forth," said Saunders. "We do believe the two sites are linked, and we do believe there is a link with organized crime." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake